labradore

"We can't allow things that are inaccurate to stand." — The Word of Our Dan, February 19, 2008.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Green shoots

Democracy lives.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Collaborationism (II)

Another day, another announcement of something which has already happened:

Collaborative Project Replicates 565-Million-Year-Old Fossil Surface

The Provincial Government and the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM), in association with Research Casting International, have completed the first phase of a joint venture to produce an exact replica of world-famous fossils at the Mistaken Point Ecological Reserve. A 70 m2 detailed mold covering of the fossil surfaces has been successfully created. Other partners in this project are the Johnson GeoCentre, Queen’s University and the University of Oxford.

Note the headline. It is redolent of another recent "collaboration" in a scientific pursuit, in which the province's role in the "collaboration" seemed to be to do little more than lie there and exist:
In collaboration with the Newfoundland and Labrador Departments of Environment and Conservation, and Natural Resources, the Nunatsiavut Government and the Institute for Environmental Monitoring and Research, the survey will be lead by biologists from the Government of Quebec in co-operation with the University of Laval.

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Burma Shave! (VII) — The Final Chapter?

Exploits Energy bids us all farewell, already speaking of itself in the past tense:


One hopes they will remember that there are only 741 days until the 2011 provincial general election, and who knows, maybe by-elections in Central Dannystan, too.

Pro-rating the Exploits Energy math, the provincial government by then will have "gained" over $107-million more, on top of the $33-million to date, from Our Dear Expropriation.

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Monday, September 28, 2009

The most wonderful time of the year

Ahhh. Late September. Corn on the cob. Redberries. And openness and accountability.

Yes, folks, it’s already Right to Know Week again. Break out the party hats. Bake cupcakes. And get ready to smash the living snot out of that piñata filled with five-dollar cheques made out to Receiver General for Canada and Newfoundland Exchequer Fund.

Of course, it will be impossible to beat RtKW 2008, which was replete with birch rind, tar twine, cherry wine and turpentine, ticker tape, go-go dancers, fireworks, pie-eating competitions, doggie dancing and — OK, maybe none of that stuff actually happened, but at least RtKW was marked by a Minister of the Crown issuing a press release.

The Honourable Jerome Kennedy, Minister of Justice and Attorney General, today acknowledged September 28 - October 3 as Right to Know Week in Newfoundland and Labrador. Right to Know Week is internationally recognized as a period to celebrate democracy, affirm the public’s right to access information held by government and acknowledge openness and transparency within the public sector.
Unfortunately, certain other events last year cast a shadow of hilarious irony over the festivities.

It is probably the potential for additional hilarious irony, stemming from certain recent developments, that has led the executive branch of government to defer to an officer of the Legislature to officially note the happy occasion this year.

Happy Right to Know Week!

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Sunday, September 27, 2009

It's not so easy being Green

In his spirited "clarification" of the Canada Day Surprise that MHAs received early this year, Tom Marshall said:
The House of Assembly Accountability, Integrity and Administration Act, commonly referred to as “The Green Act”, was passed by the House as presented in the Green report in June 2007. This legislation implemented the compensation system proposed by Chief Justice Derek Green in his review of the workings of the House of Assembly.

[...]

To review MHA compensation, Chief Justice Green recommended that once during each General Assembly, the House of Assembly should blah blah blah

[...]

Chief Justice Green’s Report is available on the Provincial Government website at www.gov.nl.ca/publicat/greenreport/.

[...]

In his report, Chief Justice Green recommended that the non-taxable allowance component be eliminated and the salary of MHAs should as of July 1, 2007, be blah blah blah

[...]

Acting on Chief Justice Green’s recommendations, government passed the House of Assembly Accountability, Integrity and Administration Act.
Here's the funny thing: Chief Justice Green, in a section of his report which Marshall, among others, seem to have forgotten about, also recommended:
As in the case of any citizen, Members should be able to make a donation privately from personal funds to whomever they consider needs it. One has to be careful, however, to ensure that more wealthy Members should not be able to obtain an advantage in promoting their own political position by making substantial personal donations, thereby placing financial pressure on less well off Members to do the same. In my view, the effects of this potential inequity can be reduced by requiring that when a Member makes a personal donation he or she should do so without reference to the fact that he or she is a Member of the House; in other words, it is to be made in a personal capacity only. It is true that many people might nevertheless recognize the name and make the connection with the Member’s public position. There is little that can be done about that if the connection is made from general knowledge in the community. However, the Member should not actively promote dissemination of information about the connection when making the donation.
Can anyone think of any of the "more wealthy Members" who make "substantial personal donations", oh, let's say, a significant portion of their salary as MHA, and are not shy about advertising the fact?

Saturday, September 26, 2009

New Dawn Without Light

Rob Antle goes in search of the latest on the New Dawn agreement, and ends up walking (and talking) in circles.

Still more Dannies

There's the Danny Williams who professes to be thick-skinned, for whom criticism is, in his words, "like water rolling right off my back".

And then there's the thin-skinned Danny Williams who protests, a little too loudly and often, that he is thick-skinned.

One wonders, with totally spontaneous, not at all co-ordinated condemnation of The Cartoon, whether by pseudonymous shills on the intertubes, or non-anonymous ones on the airwaves, or P&P, which of the Danny Williams it was that Kevin Tobin depicted.

A psychological study

Your humble typist was off on the CBC's wonderful video vault looking for an unrelated piece of tape, when he stumbled across this recent gem. (Link will launch the CBC video archive.)

Notice first the abrupt change in tone and body language when the softball butter-up question gives way, at about 1:20, to the subject of the Lower Churchill.

Notice the further change at around 4:20, when reporters turn their attention to Our Dear Battle With Our Own Dear Information Commissioner (The Traitor).

Friday, September 25, 2009

Möbius politics

Radio host No Names Please suggests this afternoon, "We don't want one-sidedness in our federal politics."

Nothing personal

How can you tell when someone is punching ODP close to the kidneys?

He blurts out filth like this:
And then you get this narrow-minded, simple-minded comment. ... Basically Lorraine Michael comes out and says you can't spend that kind of money. If Lorraine Michael was running this province, God help us. That's all I can say.
Remember, folks, this is coming out of the same condescending, hypocritical mouth that decries “personal attacks” – at least when the person being “attacked” is Himself.



(Incidentally, what kind of parallel universe have we entered into, where the Dippers are calling for spending restraint, and the nominally “Conservative” Premier is spending like a White Fleet sailor?)

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Investment (I)

Cameron Campbell and MUNSU should take a page out of Our Dear Premier's playbook.

Just spin financial incompetence such as this as an "investment", and you'll be at 80% in the CRA polls, forever.

Peeve du jour (III)

The Telegram headline writer scribbled this morning:

Kruger to shutdown production at Corner Brook mill for two weeks

And at the Ministry of Truth (Provincial), they report:
Gadhafi to Stopover in the Province

Nope.

“Shutdown” is a noun. “Shut down” is the phrasal verb. Kruger is planning a shutdown. Kruger is planning to shut down.

“Stopover” is a noun. “Stop over” is the phrasal verb. Gadhafi is planning a stopover. Gadhafi is planning to stop over.

Admission against interest

Shannie Duff should get her math right. She’s called Keith Coombs out!

- The opening line of a radio ad written and paid for by the Keith Coombs St. John's municipal election campaign.

Creating employment (IV)

Via the Ministry of Truth (Provincial):

Group of Tradespeople Having Tough Time Waiting for Jobs

September 23, 2009

The long-term prospects may be good, but one group of tradespeople are having a tough time waiting out the jobs of the future.
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers,Local 2330, has about a thousand members in this province, but president Ann Geehan, says only about 130 of them are working. She says some of these 130 workers are employed on projects throughout the province, while others are working in western Canada. Geehan says while the prospects look good for the future, she says it's tough finding work for its members at this time. She is optimistic there will be lots of work in the coming months in Labrador West, which has always been their biggest employer; and also in Long Harbour, the Hebron development; and hopefully the Lower Churchill project. Geehan says it's tough on its members waiting around to find work.

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Burma shave! (VI)

The latest from Grand Falls-Windsor's favourite shadowy dissidents:

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Thursday, September 24, 2009

Representin'

In the 2009 Speech from the Throne, We intoned:

As we move forward to forge new and stronger relationships for the century to come, it is essential that the concerns and aspirations of all members of the federation be taken into account. Unfortunately, Newfoundland and Labrador is not convinced that the current Federal administration, having ignored our best interests when developing domestic policy, will do any better in representing our best interests when developing foreign policy.

If the current Federal Government is not prepared to represent the best interests of provinces like ours, then we as a province will protect our best interests ourselves. To lower tariff barriers to our exports while safeguarding our fish stocks and securing markets for our seal products, we will speak up on our own behalf on the international stage...
It's a good thing Our new determination to represent Ourselves internationally is restricted to trade policy, and not matters like international security, terrorism, and human rights.

Otherwise, Dave Denine, as ostensible Minister of Inter-something, would have to join Lawrence Cannon on the tarmac at Torbay, registering Our official reprimand to the petrodictator of Libya.

Creating employment (III)

Resuming a series which began last month (part I, part II)…

If not natural resources industries, and if not tourism, then surely to goodness the entrepreneurial sector is driving the run-up in jobs across the province. As the MiniBiz once said:

“Small and medium-sized enterprises are invaluable to this province and demonstrate qualities that reflect our incredible strengths as a people,” said Minister O’Brien. “Creative and resourceful, hardworking and resilient - these are traits that set Newfoundland and Labrador and its people apart in a competitive global environment. They are evident in our vibrant and innovative blah blah blah blah blah.”
Those go-getters, the self-employed and small businesses, must be driving all that employment growth. Right?

Nope.

The following two graphs show the twelve-month trailing average of the number of people who are self-employed in the province (data in thousands). For example, the figure displayed for May 2009 is the average of the twelve months up to and including May 2009. This smooths out the seasonality in the self-employment figure, allowing for a long-term, apples-to-apples comparison.

In the twelve months ending in May 2009, an average of 21,400 people were self-employed in all industries. That is off the recent high of over 28,000, recorded in July 2006. That recent peak was comparable to previous peaks, which were recorded in 1994 and 1998.


Taking a longer view, the May 2009 drop brings the number of self-employed down to numeric levels not seen since the late 1970s.


Similarly, the importance of the small employer in the labour market has been stagnant or in decline for the second half of this decade. Employees who worked in enterprises of fewer than 50 employees account for less than a third of the overall employed labour force. From a modest peak of 34% in 2004, the trendline has slumped steadily downwards to 32% in the first quarter of 2009. This chart shows the percentage of the employed workforce who work in such small enterprises, as a trailing average of the previous four quarters. Note that the vertical scale is exaggerated in this chart, which does not have a vertical baseline of zero.


[Data sources: Statistics Canada tables 281-0041, 282-0011]

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No flies

Some Winston Smith or another, toiling in the labyrinthine bowels of The Party's headquarters, has already updated the official history of a certain MHA:

On September 24, 2009, Mr. Taylor resigned from the Cabinet and announced that he will be resigning as MHA on October 2, 2009.
The Ministry of Truth is a little slower to catch up on current events.

We won’t have Trevor Taylor to kick around any more

Triv is out of cabinet, and come Friday, October 9*, will be out of the Bow-Wow Parliament altogether.

As per amendments brought in by Danny Williams-Government, who dramatically shortened the maximum duration of a vacancy in the House from three months to, well, two months, the by-election in Straits and White Bay North must be called on or before December 8, 2009.

Another “piece” of DW-G’s electoral reform was the shortening of the by-election campaign period. The minimum of 21 “clear days” is still in place, but Bill 40 in 2004 also instituted a maximum of 30 “clear days”. “Clear days” means the number of days between, but not including, the calling and holding of the by-election.

If the by-election were called today, it could be held on any date between October 23rd and 31st inclusive, although the only traditional Tuesday polling date available would be the 27th.

If Hizonner in Council waits as long as possible to call the by-election (December 8), and goes for the maximum campaign (30 “clear days”), the by-election could be held, at the latest, on January 8, 2010. If the by-election is not to impinge on the Christmas period, it will have to be called much sooner rather than much later, and sooner still if the new MHA is to take his or her seat in time for the abbreviated fall sitting.

The fall series, of late, has been starting in late November, and ending in early December.

And then there’s that one, final wrinkle in the package of electoral reforms brought in by DW-G. In 2007, the Elections Act was amended by changing the provisions around special ballots. As per s. 86 (4), an elector can apply for a special ballot “not more than four weeks” before the election or by-election is even called. Good burghers of the Petit Nord, contact Elections Dannystan and vote today!


PS: the electoral district of Straits and White Bay North includes a lovely rural community called Flowers Cove.

* The dates in this posting have been re-calculated on the basis of Triv's end date as MHA: October 9th, not the 2nd as originally reported.

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Pitching a tent

Winston, here's another for your "can't make this up" file. By way of the Ministry of Truth:
Libyan Leader May Visit Province

September 24, 2009

There's nothing official yet but word is Libyan leader Muammar al-Gaddafi may make a stop in the province. The Libyan Embassy in Ottawa tells VOCM News there are preliminary talks about the leader possibly visiting Newfoundland and Labrador but nothing is confirmed on when or why he would be coming.

Cable Magnate, Great Lawyer...

... and Golf Architect. Who knew?

From today's Telegram feature, the Weekly Golf Report (which, despite the name, has not in fact been appearing weekly), comes the following bit of purple prose, which seems to have been written a couple of seasons ago:
When spring is in the air and you are getting a fever for the fairways, one course that always comes to mind is The Willows at Holyrood.

[...]

Opening its doors in the spring of 1997 to the public, the Danny Williams and Robert Walsh designed course has been noted as being one of the province's most scenic nine holes, as well as the province's toughest nine holes.
The last time Himself was mentioned in a daily newspaper in connection with golf, it was in a special by Ian Cruickshank in the Toronto Star. The travel writer had the good fortune to just happen to run into the Duffer in Chief Himself, while the Toronto Star had the good sense to disclose that "[Mr. Cruickshank's] trip was subsidized by Golf Newfoundland & Labrador."

Golf Newfoundland & Labrador, in turn, is subsidized by, well...

$7500 (III)

In 2005, out of 197,185 households in Newfoundland and Labrador, 9,690, or 5%, had total household incomes of less than $10,000.

Another 12,470, just over 6%, had household incomes that year of between $10,000 and $14,999.

Source: Statistics Canada, 2006 Census of Population, Statistics Canada catalogue no. 97-563-XCB2006045.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Catchphrase

Number of times this effort at turd-polishing contains the phrase "Williams Governmment": 0.

Number of times it contains the phrase "on a go forward basis": 2.

$7500 (II)

The income statistics in the first posting in this series included people with no income, as well as people whose principal or only source of income maybe transfers to persons, such as social assistance or old age security.

What about the working stiff?

In 2005, 32,575 of the 175,425 members of the employed labour force, age 15 and over, had total employment incomes of less than $10,000.

Again considering just the "working age" population between 25 and 64 years of age, 19% had total employment incomes of less than $10,000. There was a marked gender imbalance, with 23% of women falling into that bracket, compared to 14% of men.

Source: Statistics Canada, 2006 Census of Population, Statistics Canada catalogue no. 97-561-XCB2006014.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Take heart, Ron Ellsworth

Richie Cunningham had more than seventeen "essentials" and he won.

It was probably the angle parking that done it.

Search party

The continuing search, umm, continues, for a new, buzz-generating President for what is still the only university in the province. Via the Telegram:
Memorial University’s Presidential Search Committee held its fourth meeting Saturday attended by the full 12-person committee, as well as support staff and two consultants from Janet Wright and Associates, the executive search firm contracted by the university to assist in the initiative.

[...]

The committee and consultants plan to continue efforts in the coming months with a view to concluding a successful search by early 2010.
Really, now, what's the rush? 2010 will be only the third calendar year after Dr. Axel Meisen left the post in December, 2007.

Awareness

What the Premier IS aware of: the content of every access to information request that lands in the lap of his department’s ATI co-ordinator:

What the Premier is NOT aware of: the large, automatic raise he got three months ago.

$7500 (I)

According to the 2006 census, there were 86,130 individuals in Newfoundland and Labrador, 15 years of age or older, whose personal income in 2005, from all sources, was less than $7,000.

That's 20% of the population.

Another 20,740, or 7%, had income in 2005 of between $7,000 and $9,999.

Admittedly, many youth and PSE students are included in that cohort, and their low incomes will skew the results downward. Conversely, the guaranteed incomes from public sources for seniors 65 and older mean there are fewer seniors, in percentage terms, in the lowest income brackets than there are in the population as a whole.

Looking then at just the working-age population between 25 and 64, 14% of individuals, in 2005, had an annual income of less than $7,000. Another 6% had incomes higher $7000 or higher, but less than $10,000. Working-age individuals who earned less than $10,000 accounted for nearly 60,000 of the just under 300,000 people in those age brackets.

Individuals earning $80,000 or more that year accounted for 3% of the general population age 15 and over, and just over 4% of the working-age population.


Source: Statistics Canada, 2006 Census of Population, Statistics Canada catalogue no. 97-563-XCB2006005.

Advance notice

Last week, ODP’s comms shop gave the good folks of St. Anthony a one hour and forty minutes’, same-day notice of a Premier-positive event in their burgh.

On Monday, the same comms people gave Corner Brookers (Corner Brookians? Corner Brookites? Angulirivulans?) a bit over four hours’, same-day notice of a Premier-positive event in their neck of the Bay of Islands.

The reasonably close match between the duration of the same-day heads-up, and the driving time, at 90 km/h, from Flowers Cove to the sites of the Premierlicious events in western Newfoundland, is entirely coincidental.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Burma Shave! (V)

It's Monday, which means it's time to check in with the good, anonymous, burghers of Grand Falls-Windsor and their ongoing ad campaign. Here's the latest:

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Pease in a pod (III)

Gary Kean, The Telegram, February 19, 2005:

Premier defends ad contract

Premier Danny Williams says he takes full responsibility for retaining an advertising firm to stoke the province's pride in the Atlantic Accord deal without publicly tendering the contract.

The premier was reacting to questions posed during a break between cabinet and caucus meetings held in Corner Brook Friday relating to the hiring of M5 Marketing Communications to a reported tune of nearly $200,000.

[…]

Opposition Leader Roger Grimes criticized the premier for hiring a Conservative party-friendly firm and said the ad was nothing more than political propaganda.

"Premier Williams continuously criticized me for advertising campaigns while I was premier," Grimes said. "He stated that he would never undertake political advertising campaigns with taxpayer dollars."

The advertising firm chosen for the Accord work does have Conservative ties - its vice-president was co-chair of the Tories' 2003 election campaign.

[…]

The premier reiterated the ads were not designed to pat his government on the back and called the tendering issue "a minor breach."

"Anybody who tries to paint this as an opportune ad campaign misses the point completely," he said. "What's done is done. All I can say is anything done was done innocently and inadvertently, quite honestly."

Terry Roberts, The Telegram, March 29, 2007

Ad money well spent, Williams says

Premier Danny Williams is defending a decision to spend thousands of taxpayers dollars on an advertising campaign against Prime Minister Stephen Harper and the federal Conservatives.

"This is an ad that supports our position for having been wronged by the Government of Canada," Williams said Wednesday.

[…]

The province paid roughly $250,000 to publish full- and half-page advertisements in 16 major newspapers across Canada Wednesday.

Among the publications were The Globe and Mail, the National Post and The Telegram.

Bruce Cheadle, Canadian Press, today:

Government spends more promoting stimulus plan than flu awareness

The Conservative government is spending more than five times as many taxpayer dollars on promoting its economic plan than it is on raising public awareness about the swine flu pandemic.

That is again raising a long-standing question: when does government advertising cross the line into partisan boosterism?

Television viewers may have noticed the latest feel-good government ads about stimulus spending, including the Conservative-friendly, anti-election pitch: "We can't stop now," and "We have to stay on track."

All the ads direct viewers to a Tory-blue government website that includes more than 40 different photos of Prime Minister Stephen Harper and refers repeatedly to "the Harper government" — apparently in direct contravention of Treasury Board communications policy.

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What about at some other time?

PS, Paul, when you say:
I would like to reassure the general public that government is not considering the other cost saving options at this time.
It isn't terribly reassuring to end the sentence with the phrase, "at this time".

It's especially not reassuring when you recall what you told the House of Assembly scant days ago:
MR. ORAM: Mr. Speaker, we were very upfront in telling people that we are now doing an assessment of all X-ray and labs throughout the Province. As we know, the Cameron report was very, very clear in its recommendations that we had to look at laboratory services. I can tell you now that we are assessing every particular site in Newfoundland and Labrador. The assessment is not complete yet but when it is complete we will certainly be back, and we will certainly be making announcements as they become available.
And:
MR. ORAM: Mr. Speaker, this is an ongoing process. We are looking and assessing all laboratory and X-ray services throughout Newfoundland and Labrador. We will be talking to physicians. We will talk to whoever we need to talk to, to gain information as to what needs to be done in terms of looking at the way that we deal with X-ray services and lab services in Newfoundland and Labrador.

The fact, however, remains, Mr. Speaker. That if you look at the Cameron report and you look at recommendations such as number fourteen and number sixteen, you will see very clearly that the Cameron report talks about laboratory services and how we have to look at ways to enhance and change the way we are doing laboratory work, and laboratory work and diagnostic imaging usually go together. So we have to look at both of those particular services as we go through the Province and look at it. This assessment is ongoing and we will continue to assess it. In fact, the assessment of any type of service within health care is an ongoing process that continues forever, I say, Mr. Speaker. So we will continue to assess the services and make a decision based on that.

[...]

We have made no decisions as to where we are going to be going next. We have said very clearly we are doing a complete assessment of all laboratory and X-ray services throughout this Province. We will continue to do that. When the time is right, when we see fit, and when we see that there is a savings or we see that there is a quality of service that can be enhanced, then we will make that announcement at that point in time. We will not be making announcements in the House of Assembly, Mr. Speaker, just based on a whim.

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The unkindest cut

Out on the west coast of the nation, the Premier cuts a ribbon.

Meanwhile, far away on the east coast of the nation, the nominal health minister cuts his intestines out.

This what you signed up for, Paul?

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Review of Book Reviews

Judith MacDonald Guy Mulder, in a letter to the Telegram published in its dead-tree edition on Saturday, is scathing in her assessment of Sean T. Cadigan's Newfoundland and Labrador, A History:

Communism is dead; Marxism is dead; and no one has informed Mr. Cadigan.

To write a history of Newfoundland and Labrador from a neo-Marxist perspective is not only anachronistic, it is simply wrong and invalid.

It curves the truth and denigrates the struggle of all newcomers and settlers - from Day 1. It denies the individuality and fierce independence of the men and women who struck out on their own in this virgin place - answering to no one but themselves.

[...]

Newfoundlanders have never thought of themselves as scapegoats. They are survivors, workers, toilers, forever building a better life for themselves and theirs.

[...]

It is deeply discourteous and offensive to call Premier Danny Williams a tycoon. Stating that is to cast him in with all the previous fraudsters, hucksters, gangsters and impostors that have plagued, pillaged and plundered our beloved Newfoundland and Newfoundlanders.

On the contrary, Mr. Williams is an entrepreneur. He is a highly intelligent, compassionate human being who cares passionately about Newfoundland and Labrador, its people and the future for all.
OK, just so we're all clear here:

The reviewer repeatedly favours the collective ("Newfoundlanders", "they").

She extols the virtue of the proletariat ("They are survivors, workers, toilers...".)

And she is deeply mistrustful of capital and capitalists ("fraudsters, hucksters, gangsters and impostors that have plagued, pillaged and plundered..."), except, of course, for the Father of the Motherland, Mr. Williams.

But Sean T. Cadigan is the Marxist?

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Scraped clean and reinscribed (II)

This corner has previously noted the frequency with which history is re-written in Dannystan. As someone else once wrote:

Day by day and almost minute by minute the past was brought up to date. In this way every prediction made by the Party could be shown by documentary evidence to have been correct, nor was any item of news, or any expression of opinion, which conflicted with the needs of the moment, ever allowed to remain on record. All history was a palimpsest, scraped clean and reinscribed exactly as often as was necessary.
So, it is amusing — at least on one level — to hear ODP's comments in Montreal the other day at the taping of Brian Mulroney, This Is Your Life. As reported by CP:

Newfoundland Premier Danny Williams said he had come to pay tribute to Mulroney, for whom he did some work in the 1980s.

"He enabled us to be in a very, very strong financial position that we’re in now," Williams said.

"If I did not have an Atlantic Accord to work with when I became premier, it might not have enabled me to do the things we’re doing in Newfoundland and Labrador."
This would of course be the same 1985 Atlantic Accord, one presumes, that in the past — say, up to and including last Wednesday — would have been included in the Established Catechism of Giveaways.

Cf. the mutable theological position of the Voisey's Bay project, which, along with the "giveaways" on the offshore projects which are actually producing oil and royalties, are enabling Us to do the things We're doing since We became Premier.

Comparative centralization

A Telegram commenter tries to make a point in response to a Wangersky column:
from away not by choice from que writes: AMEN couldn't some of these HQs for NL crown companies move off the avalon? now that would make a good election platform- but then again the political machine being what it is would shut down that idea. It does parallel the fed gov't centralization of jobs & ministries in Ottawa/Gatineau.
Posted 19/09/2009 at 11:16 AM
Parallel? Nothing could be further from the truth.

About 40% of the federal civil service work in the "National Capital Region" of Ottawa-Gatineau. That is substantially lower than the 70% or so of the provincial civil service whose jobs are in the St. John's metropolitan area.

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Wow! It was just a Sham all the time

On Thursday, the Members’ Compensation Review Committee held the last of its "public meetings" in St. John's.

Meanwhile, the Secretariat for the Joint Panel appointed to review the proposed Lower Churchill Hydroelectric Generation Project is holding a third round of public information sessions, in Labrador, Quebec, and Newfoundland, beginning in North West River on Monday.

The Lower Churchill Panel's public information sessions have been, and will be, held in the evening, after working hours, with most of them running from 7:00 to 9:30.

The Members’ Compensation Review Committee held its "public meetings" from 2:00 to 5:00 in the afternoon.

Mitigating factor: at least they were held from 2:00 to 5:00 in the afternoon.

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Friday, September 18, 2009

Burma Shave! (IV)

The mid-week installation from Exploits Energy.

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Thursday, September 17, 2009

Both sides now (II)

With totally insincere apologies to Joni Mitchell:


Reams and reams of documents,
Letters in and emails sent.
“Let’s stick it to the government!”
— I used to think that way.

But now the ATIPs ruin my fun,
And no real work is getting done,
So I’ll obstruct them, every one.
They won’t get in my way

I’ve looked at FOI from both sides now,
From in and out, and still somehow,
That FOI’s a nuisance overall.
I really don’t like FOI at all.
CBC and Telegram,
I do not give a flying damn,
That ATIP Act is such a sham,
I look at it that way.

I wish you all would shut your trap,
And can the pessimistic crap.
Oh, ram it down your blasted yap,
Why can’t you go away?
I’ve looked at FOI from both sides now,
From here and there, and still somehow
It just annoys me overall.
I really don’t like FOI at all.
Those ATIP forms are ludicrous,
All those requests so frivolous,
They just want dirt to use on Us.
Well no sir, not today.

And sure, I once preached openness,
Accountability, I’d stress.
But I’m consumed and so obsessed
With ATIPs every day.
I’ve looked at FOI from both sides now,
From left and right, and still somehow,
My promises I don’t recall.
I really don’t like FOI at all.

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Wednesday, September 16, 2009

A thought on inflation

All this talk of million-dollar cost overruns on capital projects put on the books just a few years ago, like school and recreational facilities in St. Anthony, or health-care facilities in Lewisporte, is starting to get disquieting.

At the same time, it certainly is reassuring that there are no similar reports about hundreds of millions of additional construction costs, compared to earlier estimates, on other, even bigger-ticket projects, like the Hebron oil development or the so-called Lower Churchill.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

More bloat

Yet another lesson in how not to be open and accountable.

On September 11th, Jerome! tabled the annual Report on Program Expenditures and Revenues of the Consolidated Revenue Fund - 2008-09.

The document clocks in at a dialup-clogging thirteen megs and change. Go ahead. Download it (link) — if you really want to.

Why so big?

Because, apart from the cover, the rest of the document consists of scans of a paper document. It's almost as if the original publication was composed with moveable type and hot lead, or wax, or something. It's almost as if it wasn't originally prepared on commercial software, which would lend itself to instant and easy conversion into a textual PDF, instead of a graphic one. You end up with a bloated, multi-meg file, instead of a document which would likely be no more than a few hundred K, and easily accessible even to rural internet customers.

In addition, by scanning the document as images, and creating a PDF from those images, instead of generating one from its native format, the resulting PDF "text" can neither be searched nor clipped and pasted.

They should have asked a computer guru how to do things right, from a computer perspective, on a go-forward basis.

Of course, this effective defeat of the convenience and utility of modern technology, which might make it possible for members of the public to share information about the state of the provincial finances, is almost certainly not deliberate on the part of government.

Nothing could be further from the truth.

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Wiseman puts Provincial money into fluids lab


Not that kind of fluids lab.

"Strategic Technical Service" for the oil industry. Think "blood lab" — only for crude oil

That's $500,000 worth of Provincial money that former Health Minister Ross Wiseman is doling out to a private company in St. John's. Non-repayable. And astonishingly, We aren't even getting an equity share for all that trouble.

That amount, incidentally, is enough to pay for two and a quarter years worth of the public x-ray and laboratory services that current Health Minister Paul Oral is cutting in Lewisporte.

Hi, Wade!

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Paul Oram, the Self-explana-Tory

Paul Oral is appalled:
"Quite frankly, I'm appalled that someone would even make that comparison," he said. "We're talking about two separate issues altogether. What we released Friday was essentially information trying to reassure people that what I had said in the house of assembly was correct information. I was asked to release that information. I got the information together. I didn't want to sit on it. I wanted to get it out right away."

...

Oram said he didn't speak with the media last Friday because it wasn't necessary.

"It wasn't that I wasn't available," he told CBC News Monday. "I didn't see any point in commenting. I thought it was very, very self-explanatory that this is exactly what we had said, and what I had said, in the house of assembly."

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Burma Shave! (III)

The latest installment in the Exploits Energy advertising campaign, from Monday's edition of the Grand Falls-Windsor Advertiser:


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Monday, September 14, 2009

Two hour's notice

September 14, 8:45 a.m.: Premier to Announce Unique Facility for St. Anthony Region

September 14, 10:45 a.m.: Premier Announces Unique Facility for St. Anthony Region With Multimillion-dollar Investment

Easy peasy

The Western Star editorialist has a brilliant idea:
The premier and his underlings should start planning to use the so-called “Anglo-Saxon route” and forget begging Quebec to become involved. This project has been bandied about for decades and now is — as the premier says — time to get off the pot.

The Lower Churchill should be a jewel in the energy crown of this province contributing billions to our treasury and economy.

There has been enough planning and whining.

Get the financing in order and get the shovels digging.
Genius! The editorialist should run for elected office! Just go with the "Anglo-Saxon" route and get the financing in place. Devastatingly simple! No one, not even Danny, has ever thought of doing this until now?

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Sunday, September 13, 2009

Some thoughts on Quebec

A Blue Kool-Aid drinker calling himself, herself, itself, or themselves “fintip”, scribbles, on the website of a certain "Quebec"-owned newspaper:

Whether you like him or not (and clearly a great many do), Williams must be given credit for approaching the larger economic and natural resource files with a level of intelligence and determination not before seen in this province. In those areas where he has been less effective – in dealing for example with the continuing faltering fishery and the great exodus from rural Newfoundland – the greater blame must be borne by an indifferent, condescending and inept national government. That has not stopped the Quebec-owned, anaemic, shallow and overtly biased Telegram-of-today from pursuing a single-minded crusade against Williams and his government. I can sympathize with government’s dilemma – the more access they provide, the more they help the Telegram and its anti-Newfoundland ownership exploit that information in a manner that not only weakens Williams politically but undermines the Province’s stand on any number of economic issues (i.e. the running battles with Hydro-Quebec on Labrador power and Quebec-based Abitibi on the recall of natural resources).
Fintip would seem to have some deep-rooted issues with Quebec, including the fact that the Telegram’s parent company, Transcontinental, is a Canadian media company (and a pretty good one) based in Montreal.

That brings to mind a word which starts with “x” and rhymes with Jennophobia.

Fintip, it is fair to say from his, her, its, or their comments, a rather vocal supporter of “Williams.” (Never Premier, never Mr., never Danny; fintip and Williams are on a last-name basis.)

You have to wonder, then, what fintip would think of Williams dispatching His ostensible Natural Resources minister and Nalco(r) to, as the Minister might put it, beat a path to Quebec’s door. And not just any old path. As Minister Blunderdale told Randy Simms on VOCM last Friday:
We know that if you come in here as an equity player that you have to have a good return on your investment. And we want you to have a good return on your investment. But it also has to be a good deal for the people of Newfoundland and Labrador. Now we have been with that message back and forth [i.e. to Hydro-Quebec] for five years. No, sir. No, sir. There is no takeup on that proposal.
Quebec-based companies. Nefarious things, when they merely own newspapers.

What on earth would fintip think if Williams were on bended knee, all but begging a Quebec-based company, a Crown corporation, no less, to take an ownership position in Our Dear Lower Churchill?

For fintip’s own health, don’t let him (her, it, them) know that Kathy Dunderdale and Danny Williams are actively trying to undermine the position of Williams. Isn’t it terrible when one of our own betrays us like that?

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Saturday, September 12, 2009

Really, now, no shooting

So, after four o'clock on a Friday afternoon, the Department of Health and Community Services drops this spectacular nugget of poop.

Which led the Ministry of Truth (Provincial) to infotorialize:

In a move much like one criticised by government a few months ago, the province has released information in a late Friday afternoon news release without making anyone available for comment. Health Minister Paul Oram, who has been taking the brunt of criticism for cutting lab and x-ray services in Lewisporte, and Flower's Cove, is shifting the burden on Central Health.
And the Ministry of Truth (Federal) to note:

After the letters were released late Friday afternoon, a Health Department spokesperson told CBC news the health minister has no further comment at this time.

And His Worship, the suburban mayor and PNC-spouting radio gabfest host, to take a swipe at the press release that started it all. In his column (not online) in Saturday's edition of a certain Quebec-controlled daily newspaper whose title rhymes with Smellogram, Randy Simms writes:

There are six paragraphs, and a misleading headline, which reads, "Province assessing laboratory and X-ray services." It gives no indication that services will be curtailed for anyone.

For the record, this is what Himself had to say back in April, when Eastern Health employed, well, pretty much the same PR strategy:

But, y’know, when Eastern Health comes out on, late on, Idon’tknowwhattimeitwas, late on a Friday afternoon, and puts a heading out that’s misleading with regard to the real content of what the release is all about, and then says there’s nobody there to comment on it, it’s disgraceful, they should be shot over that… It’s not something that you on the tail end of a Friday afternoon, with nobody ready to stand up and answer the questions…
The Word of Our Dan. (May His Preternaturally Thick Hair Always Be Perfectly Parted.)

Now, for the love of Danny, put down the gun.

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Do not shoot anyone

No one should be shot.

Certainly not for releasing health care related documents in a press release issued after four o'clock DannyStandard Time on a Friday afternoon.

Put the gun down.

No shooty shooty.

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First time for everything

Over at BondPapers, srbp himself makes the comment:
The LC isn't an energy project or a business project: it's a re-election prop, first for Tobin and now for Williams.
Nothing could be further from the truth.

Not "first for Tobin".

Canadian Press, July 17, 1967:

Mr. Smallwood said the Churchill project would be only the beginning of power development in Labrador. There is another 3,000,000 horsepower elsewhere on the Churchill River and millions more on other Labrador waterways.

“It will go on for the next 20 years. There will be no stop. It will take 10 years to develop the Upper and Lower Churchill and another 10 years after that to develop the other.... They’ll overlap.”
Canadian Press, November 26, 1973:

[Premier Frank Moores] said many industries are likely to want to establish in Newfoundland when power from the Lower Churchill River in Labrador becomes available on the island.

Some “trigger industries” would be needed to make the Lower Churchill project feasible, especially in light of the cost of transmitting power to the island from Labrador by undersea cable across the Strait of Belle Isle, a distance of between 10 and 15 miles.

None of the power from the Lower Churchill, which has a potential of three million horsepower, would be sold outside the province.
Terrance Wills, Montreal Gazette, August 28, 1986:

Quebec and Newfoundland are making real progress in resolving their dispute over development of hydro power from the Upper Churchill River in Labrador, Premier Brian Peckford said yesterday.

At a news conference after meeting with Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, Peckford said his government has met four times with the government of Quebec Premier Robert Bourassa about hydro power from Labrador, and another meeting is scheduled this fall.

"We are not just talking concepts - we are down to specifics on how to solve the impasse between us," Peckford said.

"We've actually put some things on the table and they have responded and are looking at it," he said. "So we are making some progress. But it's a big deal and it's going to take some time. It'll take a year for sure."
Canadian Press, October 1, 1991:

Negotiations with Quebec on a $10-billion deal to develop Labrador's power potential are coming down to the wire, Newfoundland Premier Clyde Wells said Tuesday.

“We're probably getting near the end... where we're going to have a decision pretty soon,” Wells told the Newfoundland Ocean Industries Association in a luncheon speech.

Wells said there are “a couple of key areas” that remain unsettled in talks between the two provinces on a deal to build two new hydroelectric plants on the Lower Churchill River.

“I cannot give you an indication today as to whether or not we will reach agreement on that,” he said.

“But I can assure you that the government has no intention of entering into an agreement that will see those water powers developed other than in a manner that will provide for the residual economic benefits coming to this province. `We will not see a repeat of the original Churchill deal.”

[…]

The latest round of talks on the new stations began about two years ago.

“They have progressed in detail to a far, far greater extent than ever they did at any time over the last 15 or 20 years when similar discussions have taken place,” said Wells.

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Friday, September 11, 2009

What ever happened to that nice Mr. Ottenheimer?

From the Memory Hole... more specifically, from a CP wire story of March 11, 2000:
Newfoundland Tories want the provincial government to suspend talks with Quebec over hydroelectric development of the Churchill River.

The party, during its annual convention Saturday, said development shouldn't proceed until an agreement is reached on a transmission line that would bring cheaper power to Newfoundland from Labrador.

"It's important that we ensure that the people of this province are protected," said Tory energy critic John Ottenheimer.

"What better way than to ensure that we can have cheap and efficient transmission of power and resources from Labrador to the island."

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Releasing documents is easy

And see how incredibly un-difficult and not at all expensive it is to do so in electronic format?

There's a lesson in here somewhere...

Burma Shave! (II)

The latest installment in the Mad Men's campaign in central Newfoundland. This is from the mid-week edition of the Advertiser:


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Thursday, September 10, 2009

Ethics

Provincial cabinet minister, forced by ethics rules to choose between his political and his personal interests, chooses personal ones.

The provincial ethics rules rule.

At least in that particular province.

Makes a body wonder whether there might not be merit in this modest proposal.

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Danny then and now (IV)

The Transparency and Accountability Act will greatly enhance openness and accountability in government, but a comprehensive and effective Freedom of Information Act is the best safeguard against the tendency of governments to descend into official secrecy and elitism.

A Progressive Conservative government will:

  • Proclaim new Freedom of Information legislation which will include amendments that will clearly identify information that should be in the public domain, including cabinet documents, and will require full and prompt disclosure of the information to the public.

- PC Party platform, 2003 election


If we had to disclose everything that went on in cabinet, then from a Lower Churchill perspective or Hydro Quebec's perspective or anybody who's competitive in that market, they would have access to all our information and we wouldn't be able to sit down and negotiate anything.

- Himself, September 9, 2009

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Timelines

One little scrum, so much news. It’s like the Energizer Bunny of scrums. It just keeps going and going and going.

From the CBC raw video [link: http://www.cbc.ca/clips/rm-hi/nl-williams-scrum-91009.rm]
Q: Would Wade Verge maybe have gotten his information correct if he had briefing notes on what was actually going on in his constituency concerning the removal of x-ray and lab work?

Williams: Wade Verge was told by my Chief of Staff, he was told by Minister Wiseman, when he was Minister of Health, and he was told by Minister Oram as Minister of Health. Can’t do any more than that for Wade Verge.
1) Wade Verge: you thought Danny, your leader, was done insulting your intelligence with his “pfff”? Well, he wasn’t.

2) Ross Wiseman’s last full day on the job as Minister of Health – a capacity in which, with or without notes, he apparently briefed Wade Verge on the impending cuts to diagnostic services in Lewisporte – was July 8th.

Back to you, Wade, Ross, and Paul. Gee — maybe someone should have kept notes?

Piecemeal

For weeks and months in the second half of 2002, the newly-minted Leader of the Opposition hammered away at a single theme.

As Will Hilliard and CP reported in the Telegram of August 2nd that year, quoting the MHA for Humber West:
"Seeking some way to redress the unfair balance of benefits from the Upper Churchill development has, until now, been a part of what Newfoundland and Labrador expected to get from Quebec in any further development of the Churchill River system.

"It looks very much like the Grimes government has given up on that objective and is prepared to proceed with the development of Gull Island as a stand-alone project without any attempt to seek a way for Newfoundland and Labrador to get a fairer share of the benefits from the Upper Churchill."

Williams said the province would be better off developing the project through the Lower Churchill Development Corp., which was formed by the federal and provincial governments several years ago and held exclusive rights to proceed with further Churchill River hydro developments, rather than the province dealing exclusively with Hydro-Quebec again.
After the re-opening of the House, he continued to bash away on the same theme, asking, on November 18th:

Mr. Speaker, by 2010 the Government of Quebec is forecasting a shortage of power that will leave them unable to meet their commercial obligations. Cheap power is the foundation of their energy plan and their key to economic development. One would think, therefore, that Quebec’s shortage of power would put our negotiating team in the driver’s seat during negotiations on the Lower Churchill. With such obvious negotiating power, Mr. Speaker, could the Premier please tell the people why he did not use the Lower Churchill as a bargaining lever to address the inequities of the Upper Churchill contract? Would the Premier explain why he quit on the objective of every single Government of Newfoundland and Labrador since the deal was signed over thirty years ago?

Mr. Premier, you might be prepared to quit on the Upper Churchill but the people on this side of House (inaudible) are certainly not prepared (inaudible).

My question for the Premier: If the Premier is prepared to give up on the Upper Churchill and allow this lopsided agreement to continue for another forty years, what does that say about this Premier and this government and their view of our place in Canada? Are they quitters or are they merely trying to secure their political future rather than securing the best interest in the future of the children of this Province?
Saying on November 19th:

Mr. Speaker, yesterday, as a result of questions, four matters were confirmed: One, that there is no redress on the Upper Churchill, that the Premier and his government have quit on us and have quit on this issue.
On November 20th:

I say to the Premier, Mr. Speaker, and I quote the words of the chairman of his task force on our place in Canada, that it would be a sad day for this Province if there is no redress on the Upper Churchill.
Asking on the 21st:

Would the Premier please confirm the following basic components of the deal which have been disclosed during the last three days: First, that it is, in fact, a forty-five year agreement that will expire no earlier than 2055; that there will be no form of redress for the Upper Churchill […]
And on the 25th:

Mr. Speaker, let me ask the Premier a very, very straightforward question: Premier, with regard to the Lower Churchill deal, do you support moving forward on a deal with Quebec without first seeking a better deal on the Upper Churchill?

I do not want to put words in the mouth of the hon. the Premier so I will ask the Premier again a very straightforward question: With regard to the Lower Churchill deal, do you support moving forward on a deal with Quebec without first seeking a better deal on the Upper Churchill? Yes or no, Premier? That is all I want.

Mr. Speaker, a reread of Hansard will indicate that the Premier has said he does not support what Mr. Peckford did, so therefore his answer is yes, he would proceed with a deal on the Lower Churchill without seeking any redress or a better deal on the Upper Churchill.
And telling the House on December 4th:

Mr. Speaker, the reason that the Upper Churchill is so important to myself and to the caucus is because every single day that that contract continues $2 million a day worth of profit goes to the coffers of Quebec. That is $40 million after twenty days. That is $60 million dollars after thirty days. We could put that into creating jobs, into education, into health care –
All that was mostly dancing around the edge. The member raised the questions, cast the aspersions, and was pleased with himself for doing so, but assiduously avoided committing himself to anything.

At least inside the chamber.

Outside, however, he addressed what the Telegram called an “election-style” rally on December 3rd, saying, quite definitively:
Two million dollars (a day) — $60 million a month, that’s what we’re losing on the Upper Churchill and (the government is) telling us we’re living in the past. Well, there’s 39 more years of that that we got to live with. Our position here tonight ... is that there should be no deal on the Lower Churchill until there’s redress on the Upper Churchill.
No deal.

Redress.

That is Our position.

Or, at least, it was, less than seven years ago.

But times, apparently, they change.

As Kathy Blunderdale told Randy Simms of VOCM last Friday morning, describing the Lower-Churchillian efforts by the Premier and others to Go It Alone – Together:
The Premier has gone to Quebec, and gone to Premier Charest, and, y’know, we’ve had Nalco(r) visit, y’know, Hydro-Quebec, I’ve been meeting with ministers and so on, and we say to them, OK, y’know, we’ll set the Upper Churchill to one side. But, y’know, let’s sit down and have a talk about this Lower Churchill piece.
Roger Grimes would be rolling in his grave, if he had one: the people on this side of House (inaudible) are now, it would seem, prepared (inaudible).

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Burma shave!

Over the course of the summer, a guerilla marketing campaign of sorts has had the Grand Falls-Windsor area buzzing.

A really clever series of simple display ads in the Advertiser has made factual claims, and asked provocative questions, about Our Dear Expropriation of the power assets of the town's former paper operation.

For the benefit of those who don't live in the Advertiser's cachement area, here are scans of some of the ads which have been bought so far.

June 18th:


June 29th:


July 16th:


August 10th:


August 27th:


August 31st:


September 3rd:

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R.I.P. R.I. M.O.U.

Back in 2007, Danny Williams announced, with some fanfare, the signing of a not-overly relevant piece of paper involving Rhode Island.

Then, all of a sudden, nothing happened. For two years.

The Rhode Island MOU was conspicuously absent from the ostensible Natural Resources Minister's list of "multiple fronts" in a press release put out on Wednesday:
Transmission access requests have been filed with Quebec and New Brunswick as an exit point into Ontario, the Maritimes and the northeast U.S. Nalcor Energy has also entered into discussions with Emera and Nova Scotia Power to study the subsea link and access to northeast U.S. markets. A full environmental assessment process has started for the generation portion of the Lower Churchill project. Appropriate consultations continue to take place with Aboriginal groups and discussions are proceeding with the Innu Nation on an Impacts and Benefits Agreement.
Indeed, on Wednesday, thanks to a sharp question by the Leader of the Opposition, it was up to the ostensible Natural Resources Minister to preside over the funeral rites of the Rhode Island MOU whose birth was so ostentatiously presided over by the Big Guy:
MS JONES: Mr. Speaker, I have a couple of questions today to follow up on the Lower Churchill piece that we were asking about and debating yesterday in the House. Government has touted the State of Rhode Island as a potential market for Lower Churchill power. In fact, they announced and signed an MOU with them June 27, 2007, with a great deal of fanfare at that time.

I have a copy of the MOU, and I actually accessed it through the State of Rhode Island government, not through the open, accountable government they claim to be in the Province.

Mr. Speaker, two years ago they agreed to conduct a joint assessment for a long-term sale and purchase agreement of Lower Churchill power. I ask the minister today: Has this ever been completed and, if so, can you table it in the House of Assembly?

MS DUNDERDALE: In June 2007 we did, indeed, enter an MOU with Rhode Island, and during that time it was agreed that we would study the possibility of us wheeling power and selling power to the State of Rhode Island. We did the work, Mr. Speaker; Rhode Island did the work. They found out that they did not have the capacity to negotiate a long-term power purchase agreement with Nalcor on behalf of the Province. Nor were they able, in their Legislature, to do the regulatory changes that were required in order to wheel electricity into the state. Therefore, Mr. Speaker, we learned a lot through that discussion but it was not possible and we have moved on because other customers are in a position to be able to do business with Newfoundland and Labrador.

MS JONES: When they signed the MOU with the State of Rhode Island, there was a big press conference and there was a whole lot of fanfare, but it took us two years to find out that it came to nothing, absolutely nothing.

Maybe the minister can stand and tell me today what markets or what customers are you looking to secure power purchase agreements with, that have the capacity to be able to negotiate with Nalcor on Lower Churchill power.

MS DUNDERDALE: Potential markets exist for us in Labrador, on the Island of Newfoundland, in Ontario, through the New England States, and New York.

Yes, Mr. Speaker, it is absolutely possible to wheel power through and sell power. Mr. Speaker, we are doing it today. For the first time in the history of Newfoundland and Labrador, we are wheeling power through Quebec from border to border, and we are able to do that because of the Open Access Transmission Tariff. We are selling power into the United States, so it is possible. That is why we have OATT. Provinces are doing it through the country; utilities are doing it through the country. It is entirely possible.
Incidentally, isn't it amazing how, in Ms. Blunderdale's physics, it is simultanously possible and impossible to wheel power through Quebec?

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This day in history

Half a century ago today, Maurice Le Noblet Duplessis — and with him, effectively, duplessisme — was eulogized and buried in Trois-Rivières. CP reported:


The great of the land gathered here today to pay their final respects to Premier Maurice Duplessis.

The funeral was the biggest Trois-Rivieres has ever seen. The provincial government alone reserved 800 of the 1,200 seats in the Trois-Rivieres cathedral.

Most businesses were closed.

Following the services the cortege wound to St. Louis cemetery, on a hill overlooking Trois-Rivieres, the premier's home town and favourite city.

Duplessis died three days earlier in the Iron Ore Company chalet at Schefferville, a stone's throw from the Labrador border. A legend had grown up, which Duplessis did nothing to dispel, that he once urinated across the line to express his opinion of the 1927 Privy Council decision — although another legend has it that M. Duplessis may have had certain anatomical difficulties in performing such a show of contempt.

Anyway, Duplessis is dead and buried.

So is duplessisme.

At least, it is in Quebec.

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Notes from a scrum (IV)

And yet another bizarro moment from Our Dear Scrum on Wednesday, in which We pitch the Lower Churchill project:
This is a great national project. It’d provide work and provide power for at least four provinces, and also a lot of the fabrication work [mumblemumble] come out of Quebec and come out of Ontario.
Now, that’s interesting.

One day in December, 2002, the same fellow who scrummed today after speaking to the St. John’s Bored of Trade was on the offensive.

In the House of Assembly, He went ape-ballistic over the possibility that the Lower Churchill project might create jobs in other provinces, especially in Quebec:
Mr. Speaker, even more information came from the meeting in Labrador which the Premier held. Would the Premier confirm that he told that private meeting that the prefabrication of the turbines and powerhouse components would be done by Quebec companies, in Quebec?

[…]

Mr. Speaker, last month, in his economic plan for the next three years, called Horizon 2005, Premier Landry of Quebec said his government is concentrating on an agreement with Newfoundland and Labrador concerning the development of Gull Island which could lead to the creation of numerous jobs and numerous business opportunities for Quebecers. That is the contrast with our Premier.

Mr. Speaker, I ask the Premier: Why are we entering into an agreement to create numerous jobs and opportunities for Quebecers and only fifty long-term jobs for Newfoundlanders and Labradorians?
Once upon a time – that is, less than seven years ago – Lower-Churchill-related fabrication jobs in Quebec was a vice.

Now, it’s a virtue.

Then, it was a sellout.

Now, it’s a selling point by a salesman who has more than a hint of desperation in his voice.

Somewhere, Roger Grimes is rolling his eyes.

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Both sides now

It's like the scrum that keeps on giving!
I promoted ATIP, I promoted Access to Information when I was in opposition coz I felt it was worthwhile. What I've seen from the other side of the fence is some of the requests that we get for access to information are UNbelievable. Like, every speech I've ever given since I got into politics, that's ten years of speeches. So fine [mumble] staff will dig that out. Then they start to dig into more information. My staff at the Eighth Floor could spend all their time just digging out and trying to answer ATIP requests. Things that are important, things that are fundamental and that the public need to know we get that for them. But some of the requests that come in are ludicrous, they're ridiculous, they're just people who are looking for an edge, people who are trying to find something that they can hang their hat on, but, y'know, there's no hidden agenda here. This is not about trying to be secretive or private. There's just so much a government can handle, there's only so much we can do and still run the province at the same time.
Invoking the NOT(X) = X formula, a logician yields an interesting result when it's applied to the pronouncement that "this is not about trying to be secretive or private".

You can now add "ludicrous" and "ridiculous" to Himself's list of favourite latinate adjectives to describe Access to Information Requests that We Don't Like. The previous adjective of choice having been, of course, "frivolous".

But you see, here's a strange thing.

Nowhere in the governing legislation, nor in the associated regulations, will you find the words "ludicrous", "ridiculous", or "frivolous". You will certainly find nothing which gives a respondent department, like, say, the Premier's own, Executive Council, any power to determine that a request is "ludicrous", "ridiculous", or "frivolous" and ignore it accordingly. (You will also not find the magic phrase, "non-responsive".) And you will not find any exculpatory provisions about what a government can handle or how much a government can do.

Requesters request. Respondents respond. The end. Unless the Commissioner has to investigate. The end. Well, unless the courts get involved. The end.

And the strangest thing of all? That would be, to ponder the question of why the Premier himself takes such a close and fascinating interest in the content of Access to Information requests, to the point where he can throw out the specific example of the content of an ATI request like that.

Really, isn't there only so much a Premier can handle? only so much a Premier can do and still run the province at the same time?

To the Premier's credit, he does indicate in his scrum that his staff will release the speeches that are the subject of the example request. However, his talk about "the other side of the fence" makes it clear that he is acutely aware of his own — how to put this? — evolution on the issue of access to information.

Just how far has he evolved?

On November 28, 2001, he waxes indignant about delays in processing ATI requests:
Mr. Speaker, the Premier has claimed to have an open, accessible and transparent government, yet the new Freedom of Information Act, the proposed Bill 49, in fact makes it more difficult for the public to secure information due to procedural roadblocks.

Could the Premier explain to the people of Newfoundland and Labrador why the former act had a thirty-day response period, yet the new act, the proposed bill, requires reasonable efforts only in a thirty-day period, provides for an extension of a further thirty-day period under certain circumstances and, in fact, provides for circumstances where it can be in excess of ninety days? Could the Premier please explain why the differences?
On December 3 he pledges:
...I quoted Abraham Lincoln, he said: "Let the people know the truth and the country is safe. We will keep the people of this Province fully informed; there will be no secret documents, there will be no hidden agenda. If you and I know the facts then we will collectively decide the best course for our future.." of this Province. That is what I said at that time, and a week later the committee was struck to review the Freedom of Information Act. I am glad that you took that initiative.
He waxes indignant about the fee his caucus colleague was assessed, back in the day when ATIPs were still "worthwhile":
...last year, if I remember correctly, there was an incident where a member of the Opposition made an application for some information under Freedom of Information and a bill of $10,000 was proposed. The hon. the Leader of the Opposition. A $10,000 bill was put forward to try and block the information. A lot of money.
And indignant about delays:
Now, let’s deal with time periods because I think it is important to track what the ordinary individual is going to have to go through in order to get information from this government or public body or any of the people under the definitions. The former act said it took thirty days. In thirty days the information had to be provided. The new act says, reasonable efforts within thirty days. Now, Mr. Speaker, my submission is: Who decides what reasonable efforts are? So, if you can’t do it in thirty days with a reasonable effort, what is a reasonable effort: 365 days, 720 days, 31 days? Who defines that? Completely subjective.
He thinks (thought) resource-deal negotiations should be open to scrutiny:
... information about negotiations carried on by or for a public body for the government of this Province. That is the Voisey’s Bay clause. That is the Lower Churchill clause. That is the one that this government can use to prevent disclosure of negotiations. Their answer to that is: Well, you cannot disclose the negotiations. If negotiations are going on in private, it is not right to get out and disclose those negotiations. You cannot do that.

Well I submit, Mr. Speaker, we should do that. The people of this Province have a right to know what is going on. It should not be done behind closed doors. It should not be a fait accompli. It should not be signed, sealed and delivered and then rammed down their throats after it is all over. That is too late.

That is wrong. It is these kinds of clauses that are dangerous to the public. Access to information is extremely important, but denial of the right to know what is going on in those negotiations affects our future and affects the future of the children of this Province. If those resources are given away, forever and a day, when hon. members opposite are long gone, who pays the price? It will not be any of us in this House. It will be our children and it will be our grandchildren. They are the ones who are going to pay the price when it is all over.
And, on November 26th, he asks the pointed question:
Why are he and his government using this very, very important piece of legislation to deny vital information to the people of Newfoundland and Labrador? What are you trying to hide?
Of course, that was then, and this is now. Not only does He have the benefit of seeing things from the nicer side of the fence, the two situations are nothing alike.

The government he was opposing was, allegedly, using the legislation to deny access to information.

His government doesn't even deign to invoke the legislation to do the same, and more.

PS: Special greetings to the Access to Information officials from across Canada who are meeting this week in Dannystan. Be sure to buy something nice for your office staff back home: after all there are only 18 shopping days till Right to Know Week.

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Wednesday, September 09, 2009

You think it's easy to make priorities?

Municipal candidates in Capital City were asked, in a survey commissioned by the St. John's Bored of Trade,

In order of most to least important, where 1 is the most important, and 5 is the least important, please rank the follow areas in order of importance for consideration in a long-term city vision.
The five "areas" were:

- Downtown development
- Environment and sustainability, including green space planning, recycling and waste management
- Infrastructure development and revitalization, including roads and sidewalks
- Economic development, including industrial diversification
- Residential development
Nearly a third of the respondent candidates — Art Puddister, Ron Ellsworth, Dennis O'Keefe, Shannie Duff, Bernard Davis — ranked all five areas as "1".

Other funnies in the survey report are the twelve of sixteen who consider ten years or less to be "long-term", as in "long-term planning". These include Ron Ellsworth ("five to seven years") and Tom Hann ("5").

Whatever gets you through the next election.

Notes from a scrum (III)

Yet another glimpse into Our Dear Alternate Reality, courtesy of VOCM’s wonderful foray into YouTubery. He says, of the Lower Churchill project and Quebec’s involvement:

If they don’t come on side, then we’ll do it without Quebec, and we’ll do it without the government of Canada. But that’s not the way a country should operate. Quebec should be working with us, the government of Canada should be working with us.
Now, that’s odd.

A body might be forgiven for thinking, lo these past four years, that Himself was determined to “go it alone” on what He has taken to calling “the Churchill”.

As Himself told the House of Assembly on May 8, 2006:


Mr. Speaker, in anticipation of this announcement today, I spoke last night with the Prime Minister to indicate to him that this was proceeding and exactly what we were doing. I spoke to the Premier of Ontario, Dalton McGuinty, to indicate that we were proceeding on a go-alone basis but that we would certainly be prepared to entertain the Province of Ontario as a customer. I spoke to the Premier of Quebec, Jean Charest, and talked to him about what our plans were. We discussed briefly his energy proposals, which were released just last Friday. He indicated to us that they had gone ahead with their energy plans on the basis that - they assumed that we were probably going to do the Lower Churchill project on our own.
Yet now Himself is fustigating and fomenting froth against Quebec and Canada for not participating in his little go-it-alone adventure. And herself, Minister Blunderdale, expressed frustration last week on VOCM that Quebec wouldn’t take an equity stake in the Churchill.

That is, a piece of ownership.

You would think that, in ratcheting up the language of “go it alone”, that that is exactly what He, and We, wanted.

As a three year old might say, “mine!”

Apparently not.

He doesn’t want to go it alone.

He never wanted to go it alone.

As Minister Blunderdale told VOCM on Friday, “we’ve got a path beaten to their door.” The They in question being Hydro-Quebec.

When it comes to the involvement of Quebec and Canada, what He, and consequently We, want, and now have always wanted, is to go it alone – together.

Come to think of it, it would make a great slogan for a slick promotional campaign.

The Churchill: Going It Alone – Together.

Hands off, M5.

Here’s the full video. The money quotes are about a minute in.

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